Literature DB >> 2904052

Oral contraceptive use and malignancies of the genital tract. Results from the Royal College of General Practitioners' Oral Contraception Study.

V Beral1, P Hannaford, C Kay.   

Abstract

Of 47,000 women followed since 1968, those who had used oral contraceptives (ever-users) had a significantly higher incidence rate of cervical cancer than never-users. After standardisation of rates by age, parity, smoking, social class, number of previously normal cervical smears, and history of sexually transmitted disease, the excess was 41 per 100,000 woman-years for carcinoma-in-situ and 8 per 100,000 woman-years for invasive cervical cancer. Incidence increased with increasing duration of use: the standardised incidence rate for cervical cancer in women who had taken the pill for more than 10 years was four times than in never-users. Ever-users had a lower incidence of other uterine cancers (deficit 5 per 100,000 woman-years); a lower incidence of ovarian cancer was also found (deficit 4 per 100,000), but was not statistically significant. Overall, ever-users had an excess incidence for genital tract cancers 37 per 100,000 woman-years. This excess was mainly from carcinoma-in-situ of the cervix; the excess incidence of invasive cervical cancer was offset by the deficits in other uterine and ovarian cancers. Standardised mortality rates from genital cancer were similar in ever-users and never-users. Of relevance to clinical practice is the substantially different distribution of primary cancer sites: cervical cancer accounted for 75% of the invasive genital cancers and 74% of deaths from genital cancer in ever-users, but only 31% of the invasive cancers and 30% of deaths in never-users.

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Year:  1988        PMID: 2904052     DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(88)90869-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lancet        ISSN: 0140-6736            Impact factor:   79.321


  19 in total

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3.  The contraceptive pill and breast cancer in young women.

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Review 5.  Understanding obesity and endometrial cancer risk: opportunities for prevention.

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6.  Human papillomavirus detection in paraffin-embedded cervical carcinomas and metastases of the carcinomas by the polymerase chain reaction.

Authors:  E C Claas; W J Melchers; H C van der Linden; J Lindeman; W G Quint
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7.  Diagnosis and treatment of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia in general practice.

Authors:  D B Johnson; C J Rowlands
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8.  Oral contraceptive use and human papillomavirus infection in women without abnormal cytological results.

Authors:  G Veress; T Csiky-Mészáros; J Czeglédy; L Gergely
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9.  Cancer risk among users of oral contraceptives: cohort data from the Royal College of General Practitioner's oral contraception study.

Authors:  Philip C Hannaford; Sivasubramaniam Selvaraj; Alison M Elliott; Valerie Angus; Lisa Iversen; Amanda J Lee
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2007-09-11

10.  Oral contraceptives and human papillomavirus infection in cervical intraepithelial neoplasia.

Authors:  G Gitsch; C Kainz; M Studnicka; A Reinthaller; G Tatra; G Breitenecker
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